Oscar Piastri delivered a hammer blow to Lando Norris’s bid to win back-to-back races by seeing off his title rival and team-mate to take a commanding pole position for the Spanish Grand Prix.
Piastri holds a three-point championship lead over Norris, and the Australian delivered in qualifying to beat the British driver by an impressive 0.209 seconds at Barcelona’s Circuit de Catalunya – the biggest pole margin of the season so far.
World champion Max Verstappen took third place for Red Bull, one spot clear of Mercedes’ George Russell. Verstappen and Russell set identical times with the former taking the higher grid slot after setting his time first.
Lewis Hamilton qualified fifth with Kimi Antonelli sixth for Mercedes and Charles Leclerc, who completed just one quick lap in Q3, seventh.
Who is more Irish, Conor McGregor or his fellow Crumlin native Roberto Lopes?
Seán Moran: Leinster hurling final and the battle for relevance
Sharks’ shameful antics against Munster betrayed the moral code that makes rugby special
Munster final tactical analysis: Cork must be sharper with puckouts against Limerick
McLaren have won six of the eight rounds so far, and their rivals might have hoped that a clampdown on flexible front wings – which some believe has contributed to the team’s rise – would slow them down. However, the rule tweak has done little to influence McLaren’s speed, with Piastri and Norris embroiled in a tense battle for pole.
Norris secured top spot in Monaco a week ago before going on to claim his first win since March’s season opener in Melbourne.

He ended the first runs here in Q3 holding a slender 0.017 sec margin over his team-mate. Norris enjoyed a tow off Piastri’s McLaren with the Australian calling his team-mate’s antics “cheeky”.
The McLaren duo returned for a final shot at pole and although Norris improved on his first lap, it was Piastri who lit up the time sheets by taking his fourth pole of the season by two tenths.
“I am very happy,” said Piastri. “It didn’t start off in the best way. I was struggling but I found pace and the car has been mega.
“I improved quite a lot in Turn 1 on my second lap and it all came together. It wasn’t the perfect lap. It is going to be an interesting one tomorrow and I am pretty glad I am starting from pole.”
Home favourite Carlos Sainz qualified a disappointing 18th while Red Bull’s Yuki Tsunoda will prop up the grid after he clocked the slowest time with just eight tenths separating first to last in Q1.
In Formula 2, Ireland’s Alex Dunne has regained the top spot in the drivers standings after coming second in Saturday’s sprint race.
The Offaly 19-year-old, racing for Rodin Motorsport, earned nine points with his second-place finish behind MP Motorsport’s Richard Verschoor, which sees him retake the lead in the drivers championship, four points ahead of Hitech TGR’s Luke Browning.
Dunne starts Sunday’s feature race from fifth on the grid.